TRINIDAD-CRIME-Rowley urges parents to reflect on parenthood as crime escalates.

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PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad– Prime Minister Dr. Keith Rowley, who in the past has labeled Trinidad and Tobago as a violent society, urged parents to do more to curb the spread of criminal activities, particularly among children between the ages 10 to 17 years.

Addressing the opening of a police station in Maraval on the outskirts of the capital, Rowley sad that these young children were turning from primary school angels into violent teens by the age of 15, and some of them, by the time they leave school they have become demons unleashing terror on society.

“By the time they reach age 15, a pattern of behavior in the secondary schools gets increasingly unacceptable. We have a cohort of the population that is beginning to demonstrate unacceptable parchment for violence.

“By the time they get to age 17, and they come out of the school, and no longer under the school umbrella, they are now out there in the society, some of them working, some of them liming, some of the training to handle firearms and a whole wave of violence unleashed, and you ask yourself what would have happened between the primary school angels and the demons the police are confronting from time to time.”

Rowley told the audience that poor parenting may be a cause of the situation, adding, “I want to say something to my fellow citizens today that something is happening inside there that needs to be found, needs to be addressed; otherwise, this cycle will only get further and further away from us.

“And I could tell you I am not an expert in this matter; I am open to advise, but I am not entirely without a brain cell, so I can come to a conclusion now before I am advised that a significant portion of the difficulty in this country is poor parenting.”

Rowley said he was challenging parents to reflect on their methods of parenting, adding, “and if you are a parent in this country or a guardian and you are responsible for young people, I want you today, if you heard what I said, quietly reflect on whether you think that you are discharging your responsibility to your neighborhood, your family and the nation as you parent that boy or girl.

“I want to ask you to do that in private, and if the answer is no, you are not doing what you should be doing, I am asking you today to assume that responsibility,” Rowley said, adding that the government is going to direct more resources “to this issue at this time because it is required.

“Something is happening between our nine and ten-year-Olds and our 17-year-olds that is causing our society to be what it is,” Rowley said, reminding police officers of their role in society.

“We will not be able to jail ourselves, shoot ourselves out of this, or kill ourselves because those actions are not for correction or guidance.

“I will wish that no police officer, even if they carry a firearm, should never see the occasion to pull the trigger, but by the same token, if the people you are confronting also have the option to pull the trigger, are prepared to remove it, how many Westerns (movies) have you seen, there are no prizes for second place.

“These are serious issues, and it is not sufficient to come with emotions every two months or every three weeks and wail and whimper about what has happened to who is now a named person. We need to get to the root of this problem,” Rowley added.

Earlier this week, several people protested the police shooting of three people in a vehicle. As he addressed the ceremony, National Security Minister Fitzgerald Hind hinted that the protests on the capital’s outskirts were well funded and organized.

While he did not name anyone or group behind the funding, Hinds, an attorney, and a former police officer, noted that while citizens have the right to protest, they do not have the right to break the law.

He said the police have since identified and are monitoring those who allegedly injected money to orchestrate the events that impacted law-abiding citizens.

“We now have an obvious picture of what happened in those events, who was paid which money and by whom and how much,” He said. “We have a good picture of the whose, the whys, and the where’s, and the police service, as so advised, will keep a good look on this and other such developments.”

Trinidad and Tobago have recorded 279 murders since the start of the year, compared with 186 for the same period last year.

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